The words "fit" and "fat" differ by just one letter, but most people see little resemblance between the two. If you're fit, you're obviously not fat, and if you're fat you couldn't possibly be fit.
Or could you? The truth is, being overweight, or even clinically obese, poses no barrier to fitness for most people, according to new research. Exercise apparently bestows its benefits on all, even those who don't inhabit a sleek, athletic body.
A recent study of 3,148 people whose health was monitored for six years found that exercise protected them against high blood pressure, high cholesterol and other risk factors for heart disease.
"Our study shows that as long as individuals maintain their fitness and fatness levels, they are not likely to be at higher risk of developing cardiovascular disease risk factors," lead author Duck-chul Lee said in a statement released when the study was published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
"The finding that improved fitness can reduce some of these risk factors associated with increased fatness may help the two-thirds of the US adult population who are overweight or obese."